Amedeo Gennarelli
Bronze Sculptures & Bronze Figures

Amedeo Gennarelli (1881-1943) was a famous Italian Art-déco-sculptor. He is known for his nude female figures. Gennarelli was born in 1881 in Naples, Italy.

Naples is after Rome and Milan the third most populous city of Italy. This place in the mid-east has a long and eventful history that is characterized by foreign rule and oppression. Especially in museums or sights this varied history becomes perceptible.

Amedeo Gennarelli (1881-1943)

Amedeo Gennarelli (1881-1943) was a famous Italian Art-déco-sculptor. He is known for his nude female figures. Gennarelli was born in 1881 in Naples, Italy. Naples is after Rome and Milan the third most populous city of Italy. This place in the mid-east has a long and eventful history that is characterized by foreign rule and oppression. Especially in museums or sights this varied history becomes perceptible.

Amedeo Gennarelli (1881-1943)

was a famous Italian Art-déco-sculptor. He is known for his nude female figures. Gennarelli was born in 1881 in Naples, Italy.

Naples is after Rome and Milan the third most populous city of Italy. This place in the mid-east has a long and eventful history that is characterized by foreign rule and oppression. Especially in museums or sights this varied history becomes perceptible.

The life of Amedeo Gennarelli

In 1909 he immigrated to France, where he met with the great sculptors and artists of the period. In 1913 he exhibited its beautiful Marble Female Nude at the "Salon des Artistes Francais", where he exhibited regularly until 1936.

Gennarelli made his first steps for an artistic career in the city Naples. But later he moved to Paris in France to continue his education and to devote himself to the trends of Modern Art, developing at the turn of the century. Paris was the ideal starting point to pay attention to the avant-garde. A lot of painters, sculptors and graphic artists visited the city at the river Seine to take part in the development of the new arts. Amedeo increasingly dedicated himself to the Art déco and already exhibited his first works in the Salon of the Société des Artistes Français in 1913.